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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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he went to princeton. he's a debate champion. i don't think any of this sort of innuendo and guilt by association would fly in a courtroom. i think in ted cruz you have someone who's a jim demint with an attack dog. he's a tea party favorite. if you look at the national review, they very much like his style, but, again, i think in some ways it certainly reflected what republicans are hoping to do next week and that is further chip away at hagel and hope that something will stick and a another shoe will drop. >>> up next, marco rubio's big gulp might define him in the future. this is on the sideshow. this is going to be fun. this is "hart ball," the place for politics. chances are, you're not made of money, so don't overpay for motorcycle insurance. geico, see how much you could save. you ready? [ female announcer ] second kid by their second kid, every mom is an expert and more likely to choose luvs. after thousands of diaper changes, they know what works. luvs lock away wetness better than huggies for a fraction of the cost live
he went to princeton. he's a debate champion. i don't think any of this sort of innuendo and guilt by association would fly in a courtroom. i think in ted cruz you have someone who's a jim demint with an attack dog. he's a tea party favorite. if you look at the national review, they very much like his style, but, again, i think in some ways it certainly reflected what republicans are hoping to do next week and that is further chip away at hagel and hope that something will stick and a another...
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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. >> he's a harvard trained lawyer, went to princeton, debate champion and you can see him employing those tactics here. i don't think any of this sort of innuendo and sort of guilt by association would fly in a courtroom, but i think in ted cruz you have someone who is essentially auditioning to be a jim demint with an attitude. conservatives want an attack dog and he's auditioning for that role. a tea party favorite. they like his style. but again, i think in some ways it certainly reflects what republicans are hoping to do over this next week, and that is, further chip away at hagel and hope that something will stick and another shoe will drop. >> nia malika henderson and wayne slater. >> up next, marco rubio's gulp might become the moment that defines the poor guy. another iconic moment, and grups that have crippled reputations of politicians in the past. it's going to be fun. this is "hardball," the place for politics. [ female announcer ] research suggests cell health plays a key role throughout our lives. one a day women's 50+ is a complete multivitamin designed for women's he
. >> he's a harvard trained lawyer, went to princeton, debate champion and you can see him employing those tactics here. i don't think any of this sort of innuendo and sort of guilt by association would fly in a courtroom, but i think in ted cruz you have someone who is essentially auditioning to be a jim demint with an attitude. conservatives want an attack dog and he's auditioning for that role. a tea party favorite. they like his style. but again, i think in some ways it certainly...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
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that does not exist. >> michael: reminder, this man has degrees from harvard and princeton. clearly republicans have not learned from the last election. when americans made it clear that they do not reward crazy. cruz is now headline the super bowl of the conservative right. craze rewards crazy. he was at ted cruz's speech today and he comes to us from austin. welcome to the war room. >> great to be here. >> michael: in his speech today did he change tack at all following the criticism he got for his behavior especially from his own party in the senate. >> one thing he doesn't have in his repertoire is reverse. he didn't move away from anything. he was rankled a little bit by mccarthy comments although frankly among his voters and this wing of the party here. texas it's a good thing to be called a mccarthy-ite. he was up defending himself casting himself as a victim of the media and the democrats who don't want to know why chuck hagel got his money and clearly wants to establish gun control and take everybody's guns. so he was in rare form today. wasn't backing off from anyt
that does not exist. >> michael: reminder, this man has degrees from harvard and princeton. clearly republicans have not learned from the last election. when americans made it clear that they do not reward crazy. cruz is now headline the super bowl of the conservative right. craze rewards crazy. he was at ted cruz's speech today and he comes to us from austin. welcome to the war room. >> great to be here. >> michael: in his speech today did he change tack at all following the...
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>>the princeton review ranked two virginia schools as the best value public schools in america. the university of virginia in charlottesville is ranked number one. the college of william and mary in williamsburg came in fourth. the princeton review came up with the ranking based on more than 30 factors, including tuition, room and board and financial aid. >>> the very personal question a local college is now asking applicants. >>> plus a local highway where you can go a lot faster now. >>> bragging rights for the mornings spent sitting had traffic. we're number one. how many weeks we spend on average staring at brake lights. >>> weather and traffic on the 1s is next. >>> next, apple's jumbo ipad is out this morning. what you get for a bigger price tag. >>> a major debut for apple today. the new ipad 4128g will hit stores. between $800 and $930. it's twice the size of the current ipad 4. it's aimed attmore professional consumers, including architects, doctors. this could be apple's answer to microsoft's surface pro tablet. >> last year the mini and now the maxie. >> super. >>> hy
>>the princeton review ranked two virginia schools as the best value public schools in america. the university of virginia in charlottesville is ranked number one. the college of william and mary in williamsburg came in fourth. the princeton review came up with the ranking based on more than 30 factors, including tuition, room and board and financial aid. >>> the very personal question a local college is now asking applicants. >>> plus a local highway where you can go a...
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this is believed to be the oldest film of a college match, princeton and yale, 1903. at that time, versions of the game had already been played for 30 years. but football as we know it was just beginning its american journey. >> we're talking about a period when the game was being played in college, and maybe 2% of americans were even going to college. >> reporter: michael is a former nfl player turned author and college professor. >> so why would they care about what the boys are doing with their spare time? well, the popular press transformed the game into this popular spectacle. >> reporter: through lurid hyperventilating accounts, newspaper readers were drawn into a competitive world so violent that horrendous injuries and even fatales were common. the game was so wild, many wanted it banned outright, prompting president theodore roosevelt, a fan, to plead with organizers to tone it down. he succeeded, and football has grown ever since. developing a professional league before world war i, and not terribly long after world war ii, surging in popularity. >> and what
this is believed to be the oldest film of a college match, princeton and yale, 1903. at that time, versions of the game had already been played for 30 years. but football as we know it was just beginning its american journey. >> we're talking about a period when the game was being played in college, and maybe 2% of americans were even going to college. >> reporter: michael is a former nfl player turned author and college professor. >> so why would they care about what the boys...
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Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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it's really a testament like princeton professor said on twitter, it's a testament to the black youth activists who started the petition and started the pressure on the president to come back home and to address these issues. it's a good model for the black opportunity and progressive activists who are interested in pushing this president to do certain things that making your voice heard does matter. >> the president was deeply personal in this speech about the importance of fathers. take a listen. >> there's no more important ingredient for success, nothing that would be more important for us reducing violence than strong stable families. we got single moms out here that are heroic what they're doing, and we are so proud of them. but at the same time i wish i had had a father who was around and involved. >> professor, he also told these high school students what makes you a man is not making a child but having the courage to raise one. the president is not ob solving anyone of their responsibilities, is he? >> he's not. we have to take this altogether. it's not just him talking about
it's really a testament like princeton professor said on twitter, it's a testament to the black youth activists who started the petition and started the pressure on the president to come back home and to address these issues. it's a good model for the black opportunity and progressive activists who are interested in pushing this president to do certain things that making your voice heard does matter. >> the president was deeply personal in this speech about the importance of fathers. take...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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he went to princeton. he's a debate champion, and you can see him employing those sorts of tactics here. i don't think any of this sort of innuendo and sort of guilt by association would fly in a courtroom, but i think in ted cruz you have someone who is essentially auditioning to be a jim demint with an attitude. conservatives want an attack dog. he is very much auditioning for that role. he's a tea party favorite. if you look at the national review, they very much like his style. but, again, i think in some ways it certainly reflects what republicans i think are hoping to do over this next week, and that is further chip away at hagel and hope that something will stick and that another shoe will drop. >> let's take a look at another thing. first of all, just in terms of british-style debate, british-style debate you use innuendo, you use rhetoric. american-style debate, guys, is about documentation. it's about bringing in evidence. that's how we debate in this country. the british do it with flair and all
he went to princeton. he's a debate champion, and you can see him employing those sorts of tactics here. i don't think any of this sort of innuendo and sort of guilt by association would fly in a courtroom, but i think in ted cruz you have someone who is essentially auditioning to be a jim demint with an attitude. conservatives want an attack dog. he is very much auditioning for that role. he's a tea party favorite. if you look at the national review, they very much like his style. but, again,...
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it's a beautiful campus. >> oh, yeah. >> princeton university, no connection to princeton review, williams college in massachusetts and number two, harvard college. we should mention. and number one, for the private colleges, swarthmore college in pennsylvania. how much are students paying here when you consider how much aid they're being granted? >> swarthmore, a big sticker price, bringing it down to about $18, 00 for the average student. so many schools, as you mentioned, are giving out 100% of the student fees, not forcing them to take out dollar one in student loans. >> they can use some of that aid to travel overseas is this. >> study abroad programs, experience for learning within the states as well. these schools are love letters when it comes to financial aid and not forcing a student to take out a loan. >> bob franik, always great information. >> the scottos, after this. copd makes it hard to breathe, but with advair, i'm breathing better. so now i can be in the scene. advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications, advair co
it's a beautiful campus. >> oh, yeah. >> princeton university, no connection to princeton review, williams college in massachusetts and number two, harvard college. we should mention. and number one, for the private colleges, swarthmore college in pennsylvania. how much are students paying here when you consider how much aid they're being granted? >> swarthmore, a big sticker price, bringing it down to about $18, 00 for the average student. so many schools, as you mentioned,...
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Feb 20, 2013
02/13
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after graduating from princeton, where he won prizes for best senior thesis in ethics and philosophy, as well as the dante society prize, he obtained a degree from the university of oxford as a rhodes scholar. he is the author of a recent book "what is marriage," described as the most formidable defense of traditional marriage ever written. we are grateful to him for participating in this event. >> thank you so much for the introduction. thanks, everyone, for coming. a special thanks to professor koppelman. i have a pleasure of speaking on the panel with him before. i not only respect his work a great deal, but his intellectual integrity. he is willing to examine the assumptions behind views a lot of people are willing to treat as dogma. that is something very admirable. to be moderated by professor fallon, whose casebook i have to read tonight, is a little bit surreal and very much an honor. because the discussion we're having today is one that is not often had in the way we are having it, i thought it would be useful to just start by saying what i'm not going to say. it is very easy
after graduating from princeton, where he won prizes for best senior thesis in ethics and philosophy, as well as the dante society prize, he obtained a degree from the university of oxford as a rhodes scholar. he is the author of a recent book "what is marriage," described as the most formidable defense of traditional marriage ever written. we are grateful to him for participating in this event. >> thank you so much for the introduction. thanks, everyone, for coming. a special...
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republican congressman lou barletta, our own matthew dowd, paul krugman of "the new york times" and princeton and carly fiorina, former ceo of hewlett-packard. let's begin with immigration, jorge. you were very tough on the president during the campaign, he laid out his principles this week in nevada and you also saw a bipartisan group of senators do the same thing and harry reid optimistic. are you? >> i am. it's the first time i don't remember ever seeing the president and members of both parties rushing to beat the other to present an immigration proposal. i haven't seen that. it's the most important immigration news in the last 38 years and especially because it includes a path to citizenship. >> on both sides. >> yeah, so there is no amnesty. they'll pay penalties. they'll pay taxes back. they'll go back to the end of the line, and it might take up to 10 to 15 years to become u.s. citizens, so it is definitely still the promise of -- >> the man not joining the bandwagon sitting next to you. >> we're equal, either citizens or noncitizens, the promise and this is what it's going to achieve
republican congressman lou barletta, our own matthew dowd, paul krugman of "the new york times" and princeton and carly fiorina, former ceo of hewlett-packard. let's begin with immigration, jorge. you were very tough on the president during the campaign, he laid out his principles this week in nevada and you also saw a bipartisan group of senators do the same thing and harry reid optimistic. are you? >> i am. it's the first time i don't remember ever seeing the president and...
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02/13
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princeton professor, former vice chair of the fed. pretty smart guy. >> and the council of economic advisers. >> the government can cover no more than a small fraction of the projected deficits by raising taxes. sorry, democrats, but republicans are right on this one. americans are used to federal taxes running at 18.5% of gdp. they won't allow it to go to 32%. he says, and this is what's so maddening, the health care costs over the next generation are going to bankrupt us. that's what the professor says. >> there's no question about that. when i talk to president obama about it last year, he said the spending on these programs, medicare, medicaid, social security, is untenable. we have to get control over it. >> so the president agrees then with this as well? >> the president agrees, but i think if we were to take an extra hour here with andrew's idea of you need to cut something now, and i think that's right, do you need to make a down payment and prove you're serious? but do it in a much more rational way. come up with a long-term
princeton professor, former vice chair of the fed. pretty smart guy. >> and the council of economic advisers. >> the government can cover no more than a small fraction of the projected deficits by raising taxes. sorry, democrats, but republicans are right on this one. americans are used to federal taxes running at 18.5% of gdp. they won't allow it to go to 32%. he says, and this is what's so maddening, the health care costs over the next generation are going to bankrupt us. that's...
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princeton and yale, 1903. at that time versions of the game had already been played for 30 years. but football as we know it was just beginning its american journey. >> we're talking about a period when the game was being played in college, and maybe 2% of americans were even going to college. >> reporter: michael oriard is a former nfl player-turned-author and professor. >> why would they care what the boys are doing with their spare time? the popular press transformed the game into this popular spectacle. >> reporter: through lurid, hyper ventilating accounts, they were drawn into a world so violent that injuries and fatalities were common. the gape wgame was so wild, man wanted it banned outright prompting theodore roosevelt, a fan, to plead for toning it down. he developed a professional league before world war i and not terribly long after world war ii, surging in popularity. >> what changed that in the 1950s was television. television made it possible for football fans everywhere to follow professional football. also opened it up, a game for people who had no connection what
princeton and yale, 1903. at that time versions of the game had already been played for 30 years. but football as we know it was just beginning its american journey. >> we're talking about a period when the game was being played in college, and maybe 2% of americans were even going to college. >> reporter: michael oriard is a former nfl player-turned-author and professor. >> why would they care what the boys are doing with their spare time? the popular press transformed the...
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. >> yeah, alan blinder, of course, fellow princeton professor and former, i think, vice chair of the fed, was talking about the horrific problem that we're going to face with long-term debt ten years off. it's an extraordinarily serious problem. and it's dangerous when somebody with a nobel prize goes out there and says we don't have to worry about the debt. and he confuses a lot of people who, again, what shocked me is there have been a lot of bloggers who have been writing about this who don't know the difference between deficit and debt. they don't know that when you talk about long-term debt, you're talking about 2020. and when you're talking about deaf silt deficits, you're talking about 2013 and 2014, as we say all the time, deficits don't kill us, but next decade's debt does. >> exactly. until krugman started weighing in, i think there was a consensus that this was a problem. it was a long-term problem but one you had to start to address now. and what krugman has done with his million twitter followers, being the most read columnist on "the new york times," he's given respecta
. >> yeah, alan blinder, of course, fellow princeton professor and former, i think, vice chair of the fed, was talking about the horrific problem that we're going to face with long-term debt ten years off. it's an extraordinarily serious problem. and it's dangerous when somebody with a nobel prize goes out there and says we don't have to worry about the debt. and he confuses a lot of people who, again, what shocked me is there have been a lot of bloggers who have been writing about this...
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Feb 6, 2013
02/13
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not also be that the children of those who have different skills ultimately go to stanford, harvard, princeton, and be the same kind of genius that immigrants have been or -- when i say immigrants, those youngsters that you speak of? so that if you happen to be the child of an unskilled, undocumented person, you could also attain genius by going to those schools. >> i agree, and my children are going to outdo me. >> is also true that many flock to the united states because of institutions of higher learning that have the excellent professors such as yourself? >> absolutely. >> and it is a commitment of america to make sure that those individuals that may not necessarily be the children of first-generation immigrants, but those who look to this jury and say what will happen to me commission will look to the promise of america for everyone? african-american, asian, hispanic and anglo? >> i agree with that as well. >> would you commit then when you educate technological people that they should look to make sure everyone has an opporunity jack. >> there is amiss -- there is no disagreement on any
not also be that the children of those who have different skills ultimately go to stanford, harvard, princeton, and be the same kind of genius that immigrants have been or -- when i say immigrants, those youngsters that you speak of? so that if you happen to be the child of an unskilled, undocumented person, you could also attain genius by going to those schools. >> i agree, and my children are going to outdo me. >> is also true that many flock to the united states because of...
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Feb 20, 2013
02/13
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after princeton and harvard law, cruz became solicitor general of texas, arguing for states' right and tlinlgs freedom beforeligioe u.s. supreme court. tea party activists bucked the establishment to help elect cruz and now see their hard work paying off. >> he's the total package. he's brilliant, he's a great messenger for ideas, he's a true believer, and he's a guy you never have to wonder about how he's going to vote. conservatives here in texas who fueled cruz's come from behind tea party win may be ecstatic he's been so aggressive, so fast, but for some senior senators, not so much. one of the guiding principles for the senate, for a freshman senator, is come in and be a workhorse, not a showhorse. you don't seem to be following that? >> the attention that has focused on me, in my opinion, is actually primarily being driven by an effort to distract from merits of the hagel nomination. >> reporter: cruz angered senators in both parties, demanding to know, without evidence, if hagel accepted money for speeches from foreign countries that oppose u.s. interests. >> if that $200,000 th
after princeton and harvard law, cruz became solicitor general of texas, arguing for states' right and tlinlgs freedom beforeligioe u.s. supreme court. tea party activists bucked the establishment to help elect cruz and now see their hard work paying off. >> he's the total package. he's brilliant, he's a great messenger for ideas, he's a true believer, and he's a guy you never have to wonder about how he's going to vote. conservatives here in texas who fueled cruz's come from behind tea...
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. >> princeton or harvard. >> a very bright guy. >> a little too big for his britches. >> people that knew him before said you would like him. >> he has been kicking shins, being comparely rude and i guess maybe it's all a marketing ploy to raise the most money among conservatives nationwide. >> it's getting him a lot of attention. he is in the news more than anybody else. i'm not sure it's a good long term strategy for the republican party or not a good long term strategy for him. this may play to the audience in texas. beyond texas, i don't know this plays so well. >> i don't know. the problem for texas and ted cruz and his style of politics is texas is changing. six years from now, when he runs for re-election, if he runs for re-election, it will be a vastly different state, more purple. people forget not so long ago, texas was a democratic state, back and forth. do you think, like mark thinks, maybe there's a national play here? >> it was pointed out to me yesterday he was born in canada. there's a problem -- i heard this argument yesterday thinking about the future. i think he's
. >> princeton or harvard. >> a very bright guy. >> a little too big for his britches. >> people that knew him before said you would like him. >> he has been kicking shins, being comparely rude and i guess maybe it's all a marketing ploy to raise the most money among conservatives nationwide. >> it's getting him a lot of attention. he is in the news more than anybody else. i'm not sure it's a good long term strategy for the republican party or not a good long...